Rodin at the Polk: Selections from the Cantor Collections
Dec
15
to Jan 11

Rodin at the Polk: Selections from the Cantor Collections

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AUGUSTE RODIN, CLAUDE LORRAIN, MODELED 1889, MUSÉE RODIN CAST 5 OF 8, 1992 , BRONZE, COUBERTIN FOUNDRY, LENT BY IRIS CANTOR.

In the late nineteenth century, there was no sculptor who captured the world’s imagination like Auguste Rodin (1840-1917). Renowned for his ability to breathe into the bronze medium a sense of universal humanity and emotional truth like no artist before him, Rodin was celebrated in his own lifetime and continues to draw fans to this day. Even those who may not know the name “Rodin” know Rodin’s work; his timeless Thinker and his Gates of Hell are emblems of modern art history and underline how Rodin mastered the ability to convey movement and form with a touch and style uniquely his own.

Rodin’s sculptures first arrived at the Polk Museum of Art for a major exhibition in 2022, the largest showcase of sculptures in the Museum’s history. Now, fourteen of Rodin’s bronzes have returned as part of an exciting long-term agreement with the Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Foundation. The loans coincide purposefully with the Museum’s 14,000-square-foot expansion, set to open in Fall 2024, with all fourteen sculptures eventually installed throughout the space of the Museum.

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Illustrations from the Mirror: The Art of Ahmad Taylor
Sep
30
to Mar 24

Illustrations from the Mirror: The Art of Ahmad Taylor

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Illustration from ‘El’s Mirror.’

In our galleries this Fall, see how a storybook comes to life via the imaginative mind of visual artist Ahmad Taylor. We all love a children's book, but how many of us know how a book's illustrations move from abstract concept to colorful publication? In this exhibition, Illustrations from the Mirror, Taylor, an Atlanta-based artist who created the illustrations for the book El's Mirror, invites visitors to learn about the illustration process, from initial storyboarding to character studies, while immersing them in El's world.

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The Weight of Paper: Works by Women Artists from the Permanent Collection
Sep
16
to Jan 18

The Weight of Paper: Works by Women Artists from the Permanent Collection

'Lilian Garcia-Roig, ‘La Infanta Teotihuacana,’ 1995, Serigraph, Museum Purchase through funds donated in memory of Robert F. Puterbaugh, Sr., Polk Museum of Art Permanent Collection 2001.14.5.

It is no great revelation that, in the history of art, female artists have been consistently overlooked and underrepresented. That same history has also placed far greater esteem on paintings and sculptures — seemingly examples of "finished" or "final" works of art — than on works on paper.  Indeed, the arts of drawing and printmaking are commonly viewed as studies for something yet to be completed or, in the case of prints, as multipliable and thus not singular or original.  But rather than inferior, unfinished, or unoriginal, works on paper can be instructive and revelatory precisely because they offer an intimacy that other art forms do not, minimizing the distance between us and the artist, highlighting her careful hand and line-work, and offering immediate access to her process and experimentation. 

Whether sketches, etchings, or printed books, works on paper gain their value as showcases for their creators' expertise in what we call draftsmanship, the drawing skill-set that forms the root of all traditional two-dimensional art and a problematically gendered term in itself.  In this installation, we take the enormous talents of draftswomen — or, better, draftspersons — as our subject, bringing both women artists in our collection and their equally worthy works on paper to the fore. 

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Thirty-Two Aspects of Customs & Manners: Tsukioka Yoshitoshi
Aug
26
to Dec 3

Thirty-Two Aspects of Customs & Manners: Tsukioka Yoshitoshi

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‘Tiresome, The Appearance of a Virgin of the Kansei Era,’ 1888, Woodblock print, Polk Museum of Art Permanent Collection 1995.39.1, Gift of Robert Meyer.

Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839 – 1892) is widely regarded as the last great master of the ukiyo-e tradition in Japanese printmaking. He witnessed the great transition of Japan from the traditional Edo period to the westernization of the Meiji period, and the struggle between the two can be seen in his works. Much of his work served as reminders to the Japanese people of the importance of their historical and cultural heritage.

This series, Thirty-Two Aspects of Customs and Manners, was produced in 1888 and remains one of his most respected bodies of work. His unique ability to express genuine emotion in his portrayal of his subjects has been highly praised.

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Timeless Origins: The Art of Reynier Llanes
Aug
19
to Jan 14

Timeless Origins: The Art of Reynier Llanes

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Reynier Llanes, ‘Our Garden,’ 2023, Oil on canvas, Courtesy of the Artist.

Featuring the work of Cuban-born Reynier Llanes, this exhibition showcases why Llanes is a fast-rising art world star, whose symbolist narrative paintings and mixed media works underline not merely his immense talents as a realist but also his ability to conjure alternate yet convincing realities of his own imagination. Timeless Origins will feature recent works by the artist, whose memories of his roots in Cuba intertwine with his mystical, audience-engaging visions of the present and future.

Click the button below to hear the artist talk about his work and career.

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Remembering Vilna: The Holocaust and the Art of Samuel Bak
Jul
29
to Jan 7

Remembering Vilna: The Holocaust and the Art of Samuel Bak

Samuel Bak, ‘Adam and Eve and The Sweat and the Pain,’ 2009, oil on canvas

Born in 1933 in Vilna, Poland, on the eve of the Second World War, Samuel Bak is a Jewish survivor of the Holocaust. In the nearly eight decades since the end of the war, Bak has established himself as a celebrated artist who uses his vibrant, often haunting yet hope-filled paintings as catalysts for conversations on identity, memory, and social change. This exhibition, Remembering Vilna, named for Bak’s birthplace, aims to shed eye-opening light not only on the childhood experiences that have shaped Bak’s life and art but also on the importance of reconstructing and retaining historical memory for future generations. Indeed, perhaps more than an artist, Bak can be considered an essential visual storyteller, using his paintings to examine Jewish experience of the Holocaust specifically — and the terrors humans can inflict on each other universally.

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Blast From the Past: Mayfaire Selections from the Permanent Collection
Apr
30
to Sep 17

Blast From the Past: Mayfaire Selections from the Permanent Collection

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james michaels, ‘15 men,’ 1992, Oil on canvas, 1992 mayfaire by-the-lake museum purchase award through the kent harrison memorial acquisition fund, Polk Museum of Art Permanent Collection.

For the past 51 years on Mother’s Day Weekend, the Polk Museum of Art has presented its annual Mayfaire by-the-Lake fine art festival on the shores of nearby Lake Morton.The two-day fair — a staple of the Spring season — draws thousands of visitors from near and far who browse hundreds of artist tents, purchase art, listen to live music, eat classic festival food, and immerse themselves in a weekend of culture.

To be certain, Mayfaire is a lot of fun, but it is also about so much more. Mayfaire aligns with the core of the Museum’s educational mission: to bring exceptional art experiences to our entire community. Thus, while much of the history of art and museum exhibitions focus necessarily on artists of the past, Mayfaire also spotlights the importants of museums — and our museum’s — ongoing support of living artists. Indeed, the artists who exhibit at Mayfaire come from across the country to showcase their talents — and ideally get their work into the hands of collectors. The Museum has traditionally been one such collector of Mayfaire art.

This installation features a selection of some of our favorite Mayfaire artists, award-winning exhibitors whose work we have added to our own permanent collection over the decades. We dug into our archives so you can join us as we take a look back. Enjoy this Blast from the Past.

 

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In the Eye of the Mind: The Fantastic Realities of Steven Kenny
Apr
15
to Aug 5

In the Eye of the Mind: The Fantastic Realities of Steven Kenny

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Steven Kenny, ‘The PRince,’ 2004, Oil on linen, Gift of the Artist, Polk Museum of Art Permanent Collection.

Just what is it about Steven Kenny’s art that makes it so uncanny — and so very engaging?  Perhaps it is the tightly-painted Old Master manner in which he renders his works or maybe it is the way his figures and creatures seem both of our world and completely outside of it at the same time. 

Truly, in Kenny’s mind’s eye, the natural world we think we know meshes seamlessly with a version of a natural world we know we do not. Inspired stylistically by Dutch and Flemish masters of the Renaissance and Baroque eras, Kenny’s paintings are not merely eye-catching for their display of the artist’s careful, logical, and classical hand but also for their simultaneous mix of the rational and the irrational. Indeed, Kenny has become a star in the art world for his ease at evoking the manners of the past with Surrealist themes that mark them as artworks decidedly of the present.  

Kenny’s fantastic realities are filled with inversions of our understood world order; as opposed to anthropomorphizing and giving human traits to animals, Kenny conjures humans who sport wings, feathers, and fish scales. Whereas we humans may ask too much of nature in our real world, in Kenny’s paintings nature does not bend to human whims. Instead, creatures of all forms — and all sizes — bend to nature, living in strange symbiosis with their environments.

In this exhibition of his work from the past two decades, Steven Kenny invites us to enter his imagined world— and inspires us to re-consider our place in our own. 

 

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Seen & Unseen: Photographs by Imogen Cunningham
Apr
8
to Jul 15

Seen & Unseen: Photographs by Imogen Cunningham

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Imogen cunningham, ‘stan smoking 2,’ 1959, Silver Gelatin Print

This Spring and Summer, the Polk Museum of Art at Florida Southern College is excited to welcome the work of one of the most celebrated photographers in the history of art to Lakeland. The exhibition, Seen & Unseen: Photographs by Imogen Cunningham, features 60 photographs by Cunningham, whose life — and career — traversed nearly a century.

When looking at the photographs of Cunningham (1883-1976), we encounter images that reflect vital developments in 20th century art and photography — as well as the voice and eye of an undersung master of the camera. Cunningham was a female member of the male-dominated f/64 group of photographers and, despite the art-world’s tendency to overlook women artists, left her indelible stamp on the history and development of modern photography. Alongside Ansel Adams and Edward Weston, Cunningham helped pioneer a distinctively West-Coast style of photography, with iconography and compositions that purposefully contrasted those of the East Coast photographers who had defined American photography in the earliest decades of the century.

In this exhibition, featuring work from across Cunningham’s expansive seven-decade career, we invite you to see why this American artist is heralded as one of the most important pioneers of photography — regardless of her gender.

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New Eyes on the Permanent Collection
Mar
25
to Sep 3

New Eyes on the Permanent Collection

Miriam Schapiro, ‘The Poet,’ 1983, Acrylic and fabric collage on canvas, Polk Museum of Art Permanent Collection 2000.7, © 2023 Estate of Miriam Schapiro / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

This Spring, Florida Southern College undergraduate students pursuing degrees in disciplines as wide-ranging as Chemistry, Molecular Biology, Business, Graphic Design, Studio Art, and Art History and Museum Studies enrolled in a brand-new course offering called “The Art of Curating.”

As part of their coursework, students had the opportunity to contribute collectively to an actual exhibition here at the Polk Museum of Art, their College museum (and academic home to the Department of Art History and Museum Studies).  This exhibit, aptly titled New Eyes on the Permanent Collection, features highlights from the Museum’s collection of nearly 3,000 works and offers visitors a novel set of lenses and voices through which to experience (or re-experience) familiar and lesser-seen treasures from our collection. 

Indeed, in this installation, we have asked these curators-in-training to give us new educational, art historical, and personal insight into a handful of objects, seen freshly through their individual 21st-century eyes, research, and writing. Once the students have completed their assignment, you’ll find not just one but three sets of interpretive labels per work. The concept:  as opposed to a singular curatorial voice, let’s create exhibition text that engages and encourages understanding of art from several curatorial vantage points at once. 

With this unique, student-driven exhibition, we look excitedly toward the future of museums and the diverse voices that will contribute to our understanding of art, culture, and museums’ vital roles in our world.  These student curators offer us an amazing preview.

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Jerry Uelsmann: Dreams from the Darkroom
Mar
21
to Jun 10

Jerry Uelsmann: Dreams from the Darkroom

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For Jerry N. Uelsmann, the darkroom was the space where photographic dreams were made. Long before the invention of Adobe Photoshop, Uelsmann (1934-2022) distinguished himself as a modern pioneer of photomontage. By exposing multiple negatives onto a single piece of photo paper, in his works, like those on display here and part of a recent gift to our permanent collection, Uelsmann dismisses the idea of pre-visualization — that the artist should compose his image entirely in-camera without further alteration once the shutter is clicked — a concept popularized by Ansel Adams in the 1960s. 

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Hunt Slonem's Hare Salon
Feb
25
to Jun 10

Hunt Slonem's Hare Salon

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Hunt Slonem’s Hare Salon focuses on the artist’s most popular subject matter of the past several years – the rabbits or “bunnies.” Slonem was inspired to paint his signature bunnies after discovering he was born in the Year of the Rabbit. In the Chinese Zodiac, the rabbit represents hope and long life. Each rabbit Slonem creates has a different personality expressed through its eyes, whiskers (if present), position of its head, and the pose of its ears.

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An Artist's Journey: The Lifeworks of Chryssie Bilder Tavrides
Dec
17
to Apr 16

An Artist's Journey: The Lifeworks of Chryssie Bilder Tavrides

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An Artist’s Journey: The Lifeworks of Chryssie Bilder Tavrides features works from the Central Florida artist’s nine-decade-long career. Portraits, florals, and seascapes are expressed through a spectrum of materials and techniques, including acrylic, charcoal, stone lithography, and mixed-media in this retrospective exhibition.

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Edward Hopper and Guy Pène du Bois: Painting the Real
Dec
17
to Mar 26

Edward Hopper and Guy Pène du Bois: Painting the Real

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An original Polk Museum of Art exhibition, Edward Hopper and Guy Pène du Bois: Painting the Real comprises approximately sixty works and focuses on Hopper and Pène du Bois, two very thematically different but stylistically-overlapping artists who became lifelong friends from the time of their earliest studies at the New York School of Art.

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Lauren Austin: Life in Quilts
Nov
12
to Mar 19

Lauren Austin: Life in Quilts

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This original exhibition, Lauren Austin: Life in Quilts, showcases Austin’s exceptional hand and eye as a quilter and her marvel as a storyteller. Many of the works on display in the exhibition incorporate Austin's married passions for birding and exploring African-American experience with exquisite hand-threading, machine-threading, and beadwork quilts alongside historical photographs that build upon the tradition of quilt-making as a vital aspect of African-American history.

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